Pat White is looking for a shot to get back into the NFL and he might have found one.The San Francisco 49ers will bring White in for a visit after he had a private workout earlier this month and then performed again last week at the West Virginia pro day. A second-round draft pick of the Miami Dolphins in 2009, White got a call from Niners head coach Jim Harbaugh, according to Jim Corbett of USA Today.“Coach and I had a conversation about me coming in to work out,'' White told Corbett. "We haven't set up a formal date. I'm just going to make sure I keep working hard for when that day comes.

"I pay attention to how his players react to Coach Harbaugh. They all want to win for him. And he seems to treat them how they want to be treated. I'm excited to get to know him on that level -- if I do get that opportunity. I'm very optimistic about making it back to the NFL.''White’s career didn’t pan out with the Dolphins and he has dabbled with baseball. But he’s spent time recently training with quarterback guru George Whitfield Jr. in California, and Harbaugh is intrigued to take a look at White and consider him as a possible backup for Colin Kaepernick now that Alex Smith has moved on.

He doesn't have the accuracy or size to play in the NFL. I can still remember watching him get knocked out.

How much bigger is the guy in Seattle?

The guy in Seattle is 16 pounds heavier and can actually throw the ball so he doesn't have to run every time he takes a snap. As a matter of fact Pat White NEVER completed a pass in a regular season game in the NFL. Russell Wilson completed 252 of 393 passes for 3118 yards and 26 TD's.

The guy in Seattle is 16 pounds heavier and can actually throw the ball so he doesn't have to run every time he takes a snap. As a matter of fact Pat White NEVER completed a pass in a regular season game in the NFL. Russell Wilson completed 252 of 393 passes for 3118 yards and 26 TD's.

In fairness to the above comment. He only threw 5 passes.

Quote:

The San Francisco 49ers will bring White in for a visit after he had a private workout earlier this month and then performed again last week at the West Virginia pro day.

The guy in Seattle is 16 pounds heavier and can actually throw the ball so he doesn't have to run every time he takes a snap. As a matter of fact Pat White NEVER completed a pass in a regular season game in the NFL. Russell Wilson completed 252 of 393 passes for 3118 yards and 26 TD's.

In fairness to the above comment. He only threw 5 passes.

I know he only threw 5 passes. Its comical to compare Russell Wilson, who was a legit rookie of the year candidate to Pat White who might be the biggest bust in Dolphins draft history.

He doesn't have the accuracy or size to play in the NFL. I can still remember watching him get knocked out.

How much bigger is the guy in Seattle?

The guy in Seattle is 16 pounds heavier and can actually throw the ball so he doesn't have to run every time he takes a snap. As a matter of fact Pat White NEVER completed a pass in a regular season game in the NFL. Russell Wilson completed 252 of 393 passes for 3118 yards and 26 TD's.

So angry...I just don't think size has much to do with it. I also think he was a great athlete...He was just never developed into an NFL slash type player.

A stupid wildcat idea...They thought they had the next great offensive innovation

During that one season in 2008, that stupid wildcat made several teams look stupid. It was only meant as away to cover up their deficiencies and Pennington ran that as best as it could have probably been done. A flash in the pan, but actually the Wildcat was a brilliant temporary offense that brought excitement. That game in NE when they unleashed and embarrassed Belicheck was classic.

A stupid wildcat idea...They thought they had the next great offensive innovation

During that one season in 2008, that stupid wildcat made several teams look stupid. It was only meant as away to cover up their deficiencies and Pennington ran that as best as it could have probably been done. A flash in the pan, but actually the Wildcat was a brilliant temporary offense that brought excitement. That game in NE when they unleashed and embarrassed Belicheck was classic.

I agree. Nothing stupid about it. It came from the idea of "how do I get the ball in my best player's hands (Ronnie Brown)" and went from there.

It became a stupid idea when they started drafting guys in the 2nd round that couldn't do anything but run the wildcat.....I didn't mean the play itself.

The wildPat was ugly

I agree with you 100%. When you look at all the 1st, 2nd and 3rd round picks that Miami has wasted over the last 6 years you can see why they are in situation they are in. When you add the 2nd round pick that was wasted on Pat White with the picks wasted on John Beck and Chad Henne you can see how bad Miami has been at drafting talent in the recent past.

It became a stupid idea when they started drafting guys in the 2nd round that couldn't do anything but run the wildcat.....I didn't mean the play itself.

The wildPat was ugly

I agree with you 100%. When you look at all the 1st, 2nd and 3rd round picks that Miami has wasted over the last 6 years you can see why they are in situation they are in. When you add the 2nd round pick that was wasted on Pat White with the picks wasted on John Beck and Chad Henne you can see how bad Miami has been at drafting talent in the recent past.

Hindsight is always 20/20. I was actually excited about the WildCat back then, and a lot of NFL media people thought it was a good idea at the time. Heck, a lot of teams were trying the WildCat and defenses had to practice against it every week.

Was it a mistake drafting White with a 2nd round pick? Definitely, but we know this as we saw it flop. White never was mentally ready for the NFL. He seemed scared to death.

Aren't SanFron, Seattle and Washington running a modified version of the WildCat? Sporano's only chance may have been to grab Vick when he was available. By the way, I'm glad we didn't.

No, it's the pistol offense and the Air Force Academy has been running it for years. So has Nevada (where Kaepernick came from). I'm surprised it's taken this long for people to start giving it a look.

Aren't SanFron, Seattle and Washington running a modified version of the WildCat? Sporano's only chance may have been to grab Vick when he was available. By the way, I'm glad we didn't.

No, it's the pistol offense and the Air Force Academy has been running it for years. So has Nevada (where Kaepernick came from). I'm surprised it's taken this long for people to start giving it a look.

Since quarterbacks are becoming more and more athletic, it definitely seems like a great way to take advantage of that. I'm still a pocket quarterback kind of a person, but having a quarterback that can run for a first down (or more) definitely adds a dangerous element to the position. I think the reason it hasn't taken off in the NFL is that you could lose your quarterback with a hit in the open field.

Aren't SanFron, Seattle and Washington running a modified version of the WildCat? Sporano's only chance may have been to grab Vick when he was available. By the way, I'm glad we didn't.

No, it's the pistol offense and the Air Force Academy has been running it for years. So has Nevada (where Kaepernick came from). I'm surprised it's taken this long for people to start giving it a look.

Since quarterbacks are becoming more and more athletic, it definitely seems like a great way to take advantage of that. I'm still a pocket quarterback kind of a person, but having a quarterback that can run for a first down (or more) definitely adds a dangerous element to the position. I think the reason it hasn't taken off in the NFL is that you could lose your quarterback with a hit in the open field.

I think the reason it hasn't taken off is the most hyped athletic QBs generally don't make their teams better. Football is about executing strategy. Fleet footed QBs tend to rely too much on their ability to run and not enough on the strategy that was put together. Finding the right balance is the key, which is rarely found.

Im not saying Chad Henne was ever gonna be a quality QB (although after his first season playing alot of us did) but the Wildcat doomed him. I remember him having momentum on drives , marching us down the field only to be pulled in the red zone for the wildcat. Watching Ricky Williams & Ronnie Brown bust up the middle for a gain of 2 yards was ridiculous. It worked when it was new but once teams had a chance to prepare for it & the element of surprise was gone it was a waste of a down.

Dave I believe even pocket quarterbacks need to be able to run at times in every game. The days of pocket statues are gone in this game. The QB has to be able to help the line out and run for the occasional first down. I'm glad Tannehill has that trait to his game.

Dave I believe even pocket quarterbacks need to be able to run at times in every game. The days of pocket statues are gone in this game. The QB has to be able to help the line out and run for the occasional first down. I'm glad Tannehill has that trait to his game.

With all due respect. A running Qb might win a game and get some pub, but so far cannot win Super Bowl. I'll take a Qb that can throw & pick a D apart over one that can run any time. Its nice if he can run at times to get that first down, but no team wants their bed & butter QB taking unnecessary shots down the field.

Dave I believe even pocket quarterbacks need to be able to run at times in every game. The days of pocket statues are gone in this game. The QB has to be able to help the line out and run for the occasional first down. I'm glad Tannehill has that trait to his game.

With all due respect. A running Qb might win a game and get some pub, but so far cannot win Super Bowl. I'll take a Qb that can throw & pick a D apart over one that can run any time. Its nice if he can run at times to get that first down, but no team wants their bed & butter QB taking unnecessary shots down the field.